“Eight-time Emmy-winner Stewart seeks to expand his
audience to aliens who might land on earth after the extinction of the
human race and be puzzled over the artifacts we’ve left behind…In
place of skits, there are elaborate, color illustrations accompanied by
captions written with his trademark deadpan humor…Nothing is off-limits here, not even Benjamin Franklin, whose
pithy saying, ‘Nothing is certain but death and taxes’ Stewart expands
upon. The book ends with a plea to the aliens to reconstruct the human
race from DNA in the hope that, with guidance from the visitors, ‘we
could overcome the baser aspects of our nature...and give this planet
the kind of caretakers it deserves,’ revealing the tears behind
Stewart’s clown.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Stewart and the writers of his
celebrated Daily Show together narrate this satirical overview of
humanity written as though it were being explained to aliens of the
future who discover Earth after the demise of all human life. Stewart,
the primary narrator, explains religion, history, commerce, government,
customs, and society in his trademark delivery…this is a timely and entertaining title sure to do well
among Stewart's many fans, who will doubtless laugh along. Recommended.” —Library Journal
“Yes, once
again fearless anchor and ringleader Jon Stewart and his gang of
snark-attack writers at The Daily Show bring barbed, laser-guided
intelligence camouflaged with gleeful vulgarity to the page, this time
to tell the story of Earth from its gritty beginnings as an unwieldy
whirl of gasses and dust to its coalescence into a ‘fertile oasis of
sophisticated life in the endless barren expanse of the universe (no
offense)’…this guide to Earth and human
civilization, from the Parthenon to reality TV, is addressed to the
aliens who will arrive in the wake of humankind’s looming
self-destruction. In the hope of being remembered, and, perhaps,
replicated, the wily and irreverent Daily Show crew marshal arrays of
small images spiked with sight gags and accompanied by vinegary little
captions to chronicle humankind’s rampant inventiveness and deadly
inanity. Patches of actual science, albeit laced with such silly
business as a recipe for Primordial Soup, give way to comedic takes on
everything from adolescence to Larry King, our obsession with skin
color, love (which has inspired poetry and restraining orders),
celebrities, religion, advertising, and war. Funny on levels high and
low, this rambunctious chronicle of the defeat of reason is a
topsy-turvy tribute to a ‘planet of singular beauty’ and its problem
children.” —Booklist